i b h iiib X • < > " ..V FA û JÈ TWO wM i i • THE SHERMAN COUNTY JOURNAL, MORO, OREGON FRIDAY,, MARCH 31, 1989 '"i 1 " ■— r p riv a te a f ì i r r m a» Çsumtç ¿fcwirjmX CÜUntin* Kent wh*re dcmpafty handles the telephone service. Sherman County Observer (Continued from page one) Rural users pay $5 a yexr an. a combined' tax levy of only 19.4 Established Nov. 2, 1888 1 are supposed to keep up their own Grass Valley Journal mills has the lowest levy oft. any i lines. Town users are charged incorporated city in Oregon it’ was ^ ^ ttx A q n L n a f ' a - the ratc of {>er year unle8s fONSOLIDATED March , they ¿esire a more expensive revealed in a city sax sum m ary Wasco News’Enterprise I piK>n.e< Income from this yearly ju st compiled »by W alter E. P ear­ son, state treasurer. Established Nov. 1891 : charge to the company can be ac- Bay City in Tillamook county, JONSOLIDATED March 4, 1932 curately estim ated a t $6250 per _________________________ ______ ! year and toll charges undoubt- ?n the other (hand, has the high­ est combined tax levy in the state Published Every Friday a t I tdly make the total much higher. ! Out of this the cmopany pays totalling 121.2 mills. O ther high Moro, Oregon i ¡abor> reni> taxes and upkeep ol tax levies are shown as follows: Vale, Malheur county, 116.8 m ills; Giles L. French Editor ¡.the offices and lines and it is doubtful if there is much profit Ontario, Malheur county, 114.8 Entered as second-class m atte r a t from operations in this county, mills; W arenton, Clatsop county, the Postoffice a t Moro, Oregon except the profit th at comes from 109.8 mills; Seaside, Clatsop coun­ ander Act of Congress of March complete service all over the ty, 98.5 mills; and Milwaukie, 5, 1879. stab and the additional business Clackamas county, 96.8 mills. One hundred and twenty-six that accrues thereby. The fact Oregon cities show an increase in that there are telephones in this ER One county, and sim ilar counties, their combined tax levies over IA T I OR makes telephones fore valuable 1938 while only 67 cities show a Pm li s lower combined levy this year in the populous places. OFFICIAL COUNTY PAPER Under the proposed dial system than last the farm er lines will have to be SUBSCRIPTION RATES kept in much better .repair than Payable in Advance at present which cannot be. con­ * Governor Sprague has issued a ONE YEAR ...................- ....... strued as a bad thing at all. The public statem ent urging the citi­ cost for new phones will be $3 zens of Oregon to join in the na­ from each farm er for a total tional observance of Army. Day, MARCH 31, 1989 "of $750. The cost of new m ater­ April 61 In his statem ent thé gov ial and labor on the farm lines ?rnor emphasizes the “need of the IF IT WAS ON MARS will be nearly $5000 if the lines national defense and the impor­ Returning from a sojourn of five months in the far north of Alaska, on Cshigat Island, which she leased are put into good condition. The tance of m aintaining an arm y Were we to read th at on M ars, company, in turn, will invest adequate for the needs of this from the government. Miss Kay Baker, West Virginia socialite, arrived In Seattle with 20 foxes that she had in Minnesota or in the W illamette many dollars in new equipment nation, highly trained and (proper­ raised. Center inset: M argaret Ayer Barnes, Pulitzer prize winner in 1931, who with Edward Sheldon, bed­ valley there were five little grade ly equipped.” ridden writer, was awarded damages of $532,153 for the plagiarism of their Broadway success, “ Dishonored for each of the central offices. and high schools strung along a Lady.” The court held that the movie, "Letty Linton,” infringed oo their play. At the right: Miss Marguerite • * * The company may (be expected paved highway and th at the pat­ Madden. 16. Boston, winner of the girls’ national indoor tennis title in recent New York matches. to be making the change in ordei Attorney General Van Winkle rons of each one were dissatisfied to eventually realize a profit iron has ruled that school boards have with their school because it was so restricted in subjects; and th at their investment here wihereai no authority to conduct (education­ it would be possible to teach the they have not (been x doing so al or recreational tours financed subjects wanted if the schools There is no criticism of the com­ out of school funds. were larger with the federal gov­ pany for this ambition. This does, however, seem to be ernment paying for much of the The San Francisco fa ir wjJl bring a good time for the people of the # », added instruction; and th at there the largest crop of tourists to pr&ä was little chance of the schools county to arrange for broader ser­ Oregon in the history of the state - ? Y “?,4 " ' • y * J ¡ f e getting larger, but rath e r smaller, vice, for the opportunity, to talk in the opinion of Harold Say, what would we say would be the to more »people. The compan\ head of the state highway dep art­ K < % r ■ &. could make a saving by having Twenty-three 4-H d u b • mem- » obvious solution, one dial system central instead ot m ent’s travel information bureau, bers in Oregon will apentf the first J If fu rth er we were to read that three and if it could be persuadet .he bureau has already had in­ the millages levied for the support to extend the fama lines to th* ju rie s from 26,000 p. rsons seek- w A l IN l OWN. i ' ing. grange meeting and in these Tuesday’s up train loaded a Distance, time and space have been annihilated columns. live horse on the pilot on the en­ Lupine Rebekah Lodge No. l i t Moro. Oregon gine, but it died very soofi a fter by the speed, dependability and excellence o f Meets 2d A 4th Tue* and had to be unloaded. MORE ABOUT TELEPHONES One of G. P. H iggingotham ’s day of each month, Long Distance Telephone Service. . A check on the telephones in four horse team s dashed through Visiting members wel the county although roughly vnade town on the 23rd w ithout a driv- come. IC N IS « 1 € R S IN T R A F F IC W I N shows th a t there is about 425 er. Neither tewn or wagon was Rebekah Wilson, N.G S IX F C t T O F O H O U N P Z Florence Johnston-Sec subscriber* in the county without seriously, damaged. Fox P Ä - r — wins «532,153 Suit—Tennis Queen News of 4-H YOURS IN TRUST CLUBS H WE M UST PROTECT IT Í W VR°M In Other Days , Sherman County Journal P r in t y o u r S tatio n ery , Billheads, O ffice F o rm s, and other P rinted M a tte r THE PACIFIC TELEPHONE ARD TELEGRAPH COMPANY CROWDED . , i k dance hall is certainly erowdad.*- “I’ll say so. H alf an hour ago I fainted and had to dance around tour times before I could fall.” Notice of Final Hearing. All persons ai^e hereby notified to file their objections if any, to the final account of the executor and executrix of the will of John Mathieson Sr., deceased, on or be­ fore April 14, 1939, at 10 o ’clock a. m., which is the time fixed by the County Court of Sherman Ccunty, Oregon for., the w ttle-. nifcnt of said final account. Margaret Leff, executrix. Hugh S. Mathieson, executor. 19-22 SUMMONS. . » IN THE C IR C U IT COURT OF . THE STATE OF OREGON FOR SHERMAN COUNTY. 'DAVID REID and LENORA REID, huatband and wife, Plain­ tiff«, » -vs- W ALTER A. BURK­ HART, N ELLIE A. CRAWFORD, FRANKLIN M. SIDES, and all of the unknown heirs of JOANNA E. SMITH, deceased, JA N E DOE ROBERTS, surviving daughter of PICKERING T. ROBERTS, de­ ceased (tru e name unknown), all of the unknown heirs of Pickering T. Roberts, deceased, also all other persons or parties unknown claim ing any right, title, estate, lien or interest in the real estate described in the com plaint herein. Defendants. TO WALTER A. BURKHART. N ELLIE A. CRAWFORD, FRA­ NKLIN M. SIDES, and all of the unknown heirs of JOANNA E. SMITH, deceased, JA N E DOE ROBERTS, surviving daughter of PICKERING T. ROBERTS, de­ ceased (true name unknown), all of the unknown heirs of Pickering' T. Roberts, deceased, also all oth­ er persons or parties unknown claiming any right, title, estate, lien or interest in the real estate ¿¿scribed in the complaint herein, Defendants: IN TH E NAME OF THE STATE OF OREGON, you are inquired to answ er the complain, filed against you in the ab ve cause on or before four weeks from the date of the first publi­ cation of this summons; if you fail to answer, for want thereof, plaintiffs will apply to thé eohrt for the relief demanded in the complaint : for a judgm ent t gainst each of you th at plaintiffs b > adjudged and decreed th a t each and all of the defendants have no estate, right, title or interest v h a t soever in or to the land herein described, and th at the title thereof be adjudged free and clear of liens, interesits and d aim s in favor of the plaintiffs and a- gainst all of the defendants. T hat the title to the above de­ scribed land be quieted and th at plaintiffs be declared to have a fee simple title therein and there- t'». That each and all defendants bn forever enjoin?d and debarred from asserting or claiming any right whatsoever in or to said land adverse to the plaintiffs and that plaintiffs be declared the sole and exclusive owners thereof and f >r the plaintiffs costs and dis­ bursem ents and such other, fu r­ ther and additional relief as to rine Court shall seem equitable. *1 bat a description of said land i • which the plaintiffs are asking f >r the relief herein and in the complaint is situated in Sherman County, State of Oregon, and de­ scribed as follows: Southeast quarter of Section 2: South half of Section 1: N ortheast qu arter of Sec­ tion 11; the N orthw est quar­ ter and the N orth half of the Southwest quarter and the N orthw est qu arter of the Southeast quarter of Section 12, all in Township 2 N orth Range 17 E ast W. M. This summons is served upon ycu pursuant to an order of Hon. Carl Hendricks, Judge of said Court, made on the 13th day of March, 1939, which directs th a t this summons be published once each week for four consecutive weeks in the Sherman County Journal, a newspaper published a t Moro, Oregon, knd that a copy of the complaint and summons be deposited in the United States postoffice a t The Dallesj Oregon, with postage tihereon prepaid, directed to Nellie A. Crawford at Red Oak, Missouri, and a copy of the summons and complaint be so d posited in the United S tates popt-office ait The Dalles, Oregon, with postage thereon prepaid, di­ rected to W alter A. B urkhart a t Carthage, Missouri, and th a t a copy of the ,summons and com­ plaint be deposited in the United S tates postoffice ait The Dalles, Oregon, With postage thereon r e p a id , directe*! to Fraïlklîn M. S d es a t Cflrihngs. Missouri, and that all of said co>rias of summons and complaint be certified to; that copy of summons and eom- p’ain t be not deposited in the Posit Office nor sent to the other de­ fendants, as their whereabouts ia unknown. | The first publication ..of thia 1 summons is M.^rch 16, 1939. ; ^ N K G. DICK ! A ttornev for Plaintiffs Post Office Address: - The Dalles « Oregon. 19-22 F-*S J f «